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Big Blue Catfish In Ohio Reservoirs
Ohio Fishing Articles, Regional Fishing, United States Fishing Articles | Ohio theangler PM
Blue catfish fry were stocked at the Hebron State Fish Hatchery in Licking County in the springs of 2009 and 2010. They were raised there for approximately 16 months. The yearling (9 to 12 inches) blues from the hatchery ponds were stocked into Dillon Reservoir in October 2010 and Hoover Reservoir in October 2011.
Dillon Reservoir is an impoundment of the Licking River in Muskingum County that is regulated by the Army Corps of Engineers for flood control. Hoover is an impoundment of Big Walnut Creek in Franklin County which is owned and operated by the City of Columbus as a source of municipal drinking water. Dillon is approximately half the size of Hoover (1,370 acres versus 2,880 acres, respectively) and about half as deep (average depth is 9.2 feet versus 22.3 feet, respectively), but Dillon drains about four times as much land area (1,693 sq. km versus 495 sq. km, respectively). Water flows through Dillon much more quickly than at Hoover because of these differences; on average it takes about nine days to turn over the entire volume of Dillon, compared to approximately 190 days for Hoover. These reservoirs were chosen by the division because of these hydrological differences, and also because they have surpluses of prey fish (primarily gizzard shad) that are capable of supporting additional predators.
The results of this study have shown that stocking blues can produce additional catfish angling opportunities in certain Ohio reservoirs under the right conditions.